Showing posts with label yucca. Show all posts
Showing posts with label yucca. Show all posts

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

In The Rain


The rain didn't hold off this morning, already falling lightly when I woke up. Only a single cup of joe was needed to get me out there, though. With a possible three days of rain ahead, it'd be a crime not to take advantage of it.

It wasn't raining hard and it was still relatively warm (64), so I didn't mind getting a little damp. In fact, its one of my favorite times to be out there messing around in the dirt.

I had just started selecting the right locations for those orange marigolds (which really brightened up even a pretty rainy and gray morning as this one), when word came via one of our dog-walking neighbors, Snoopy the min-pin's dad (I'm amused by the fact we don't know each other's names, only the names of our dogs), that there was a big turtle come up from the pond and in another neighbor's yard.

Of course, I set my digging tools in out of the rain and grabbed my camera for a little walk around the block, where I found this snapping turtle (probably almost two foot from nose to tail)slowly heading up the driveway into someone's back yard.

It wasn't clear to me if she'd have a clear shot at the woods going that way, but I wasn't about to attempt to give her directions, either. She was following the beat of her drummer, and so after taking a photo or two, I headed back to the garden to listen to my own cadence a little longer and she made her way up the driveway toward the lawn and whatever place she decided was appropriate for laying eggs.

After finding the right spots for each of the marigolds, I managed another round of seed planting in a variety of recently-weeded sections of the garden. This morning's mass sowing included the second half of those bachelor buttons, as well as some more cleome(*) and allyssum, chamomile and tall sulphur cosmos.

This meant another chance to draw patterns on the soil, but because of the rain, I used a stick today and not my finger. Hard enough trying to keep the seeds from sticking together without having muddy hands.

The rain was getting heavier as I planted and although I've more seeds to plant, I'd exhausted the free time I had this morning and it was time to get ready for work. But not until I'd enjoyed a long lingering look at the way the garden's shaping up.

* So, I have a confession to make. I did a bad thing recently, not something a gardener ought to do, and I'm feeling a little guilty about it. Remember those lovely and strong looking cleome seedlings I had in the bedroom window? Well, I've grown accustomed in recent years to having partially shaded/protected garden beds, which gave me latitude to be a little casual with some of my plantings, as the surrounding trees offered some security against the stronger winds and even some mild frosts.

But for this new location, with it's direct sunlight and gusting winds, I really ought to have taken an extra day or two to accustom my little babies to life in the Big Bad World (You may recall me having some misgivings after the fact that evening, actually.)for little bits of time before the big planting.

Instead, I just split them up and put them out there in the ground.

Some, I'm sorry to say, simply fell over and died. A few turned a little white, but look like they'll recover...and there's still a third group who took just enough shelter from nearby perennials that they are doing quite well.

Still in all, I ought to have known better. Bad gardener.

There's another look at those yucca plants I showed you the other night, their flower stalks another foot taller than on Sunday. I was mistaken, actually: all three plants are doing this. What a show it will be!

The best reason for today's rain being a good thing is the way it's washed the pollen off everything.

I thought I saw a humpback whale in this pool of pollen, but then it seemed more like a dove maybe. Now I think it looks like Heath Ledger as the Joker, but that might just be me anticipating the new Batman movie this July.

Have you seen the trailer?

Sunday, June 01, 2008

June's First Magical Night


So it was Sunday Night, a busy end to a busy weekend.

It was certainly a beautiful weekend, weather-wise, with only an abbreviated version of the rain we'd expected for Saturday. Sunday was our warmest day yet, in the low seventies. Mmmm. It also brought that first visible dusting of pollen, the yellowy-green film that settles over everything and reminds you of just how many plants are out there, gettin' jiggy with it.

I had a free couple of moments, a lull in the action you could say, when I might formerly have been smoking a cigarette. But the light was just great and I really wanted to get a better photo of the white siberian iris, as Jeremy from Pittsgrove Farms had been wondering if it was the Snow Queen.

All these pictures should get bigger if you click. There's a bit of the blue siberian iris showing to the left in this shot, but just barely, as it fades into the shadows pretty readily. That low green mound behind the white irises is a PG hydrangea, which usually starts really blooming as the summer winds down--great for fall bouquets and displays. The red tree is a cherry of some variety.

I was excited to get home and look closer at this picture and see that two of those three yuccas amidst the irises are sending their epic flower stalks up toward the sky. I transplanted the trio in there a few years back, so it's nice to see them doing what I'd imagined at the time. Someday those white bell flowers will be blooming in time for someone's wedding photos and it'll be just perfect.

Of course, I didn't imagine they might look so suggestive in progress toward that goal. Heh...that's spring for you.

Anyway, here's the quarry, just glowing in the evening's fading sun, the sky going to fire to the west, and cooly blue overhead.

I love the way the shadows fall across this flower, changing it's all white (excepting the yellow bits)appearance on the fall. I think it's a good illustration of why sometimes we are so bamboozled to explain why our cameras seem to capture colors other than the ones we think more honestly represent the colors as we see them.

Happy June, everyone! Begin the merriment, commence with the frolicking, already!!

Monday, June 25, 2007

Hazy Afternoon



Here's our meadow on this hazy afternoon, as seen through a pair of yucca spikes which are climbing toward the sky.

This is a nice assortment of wild daisies and dianthus. I look forward to seeing the two spread and grow together.

Summer's heat came home to roost today, and it sounds like it'll be with us throughout the coming week. The tomato plants are sure to be happy. They all seem to have taken a giant leap for Tomato-kind in my absence.

New blooms are appearing on the largest of the peony plants. Many of the old ones look good, though certainly they accounted for just some of the dead-heading that was needed following my weekend away.

Now, by dead-heading of course, I mean removing the spent flower heads to encourage more bloom, not dancing around the meadow in tie-dye and cargo shorts, with a doobie in hand. Although, it being the Midsummer Revels, all celebrations are welcome!

And here's a nice bouquet I put together for us, featuring the tickseed, some daisies and two of those great red roses from the trellace out back.

Friday, September 23, 2005

Grasshopper on yucca leaf. Posted by Picasa

Monday, July 18, 2005

Saturday, July 02, 2005

Spider explores a tower of yucca buds. Posted by Picasa